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2: Solar and Infrared Radiation

  • Page ID
    46089
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    Alison Nugent

    Learning Objectives

    By the end of this chapter, you should be able to:

    • Define black body radiation and Planck’s Law
    • Apply Wien’s law to compute the maximum emission wavelength
    • Use Stefan-Boltzmann’s law to compute radiative emittance
    • Describe Earth’s surface radiation budget, including shortwave and longwave components
    • Define and differentiate obliquity, eccentricity, and precession
    • Describe the cause of seasons on Earth
    • Describe the diurnal cycle of radiative fluxes

    • 2.1: Introduction
      This page explains how the Sun's energy reaches Earth through radiation, affecting temperature and sunburn risk. It underlines the significance of shade in temperature reduction and highlights radiation as the primary method of energy transfer in space, enabling the Sun's energy to travel approximately 93 million miles to influence Earth's environment.
    • 2.2: Radiation
      This page explains radiation as electromagnetic waves generated by electric and magnetic fields, categorized by wavelength into types like radio waves and x-rays. It highlights the inverse relationship between wavelength, frequency, and temperature: colder objects emit lower frequencies and longer wavelengths, while warmer objects emit higher frequencies and shorter wavelengths. This principle is consistent across various temperature scales, from near absolute zero to millions of Kelvins.
    • 2.3: Wave Propagation
      This page explores the characteristics of electromagnetic radiation from the Sun, highlighting that all electromagnetic waves travel at light speed. It defines key properties such as wavelength, frequency, and wavenumber, and draws similarities to ocean waves by explaining terms like wave period and wave height, although noting that electromagnetic waves do not break like ocean waves.
    • 2.4: Characterizing Emission
      This page covers the sources of electromagnetic energy emitted by objects above absolute zero, explaining blackbody radiation and Planck's curves related to temperature. It highlights Wien's Law for determining maximum wavelength emitted, indicating that hotter objects emit shorter wavelengths.
    • 2.5: Application to the Earth-Sun System
      This page explains the energy balance between the Earth and the Sun, focusing on how temperature differences affect radiation. The Sun emits shortwave ultraviolet radiation due to its high temperature, while Earth emits longwave infrared radiation. This process is linked to the electromagnetic spectrum and Planck’s law, indicating that hotter bodies emit shorter wavelengths.


    2: Solar and Infrared Radiation is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.